Petitioner developed a hull design for a fiberglass recreational
boat that it marketed under the trade name Bonito Boat Model 5VBR.
The manufacturing process involved creating a hardwood model that
was then sprayed with fiberglass to create a mold. The mold then
served to produce the finished fiberglass boats for sale. No patent
application was filed to protect the utilitarian or design aspects
of the hull or the manufacturing process by which the finished
boats were produced. After the Bonito 5VBR had been on the market
for six years, the Florida Legislature enacted a statute that
prohibits the use of a direct molding process to duplicate
unpatented boat hulls, and forbids the knowing sale of hulls so
duplicated. Petitioner subsequently filed an action in a Florida
Circuit Court, alleging that respondent had violated the statute by
using the direct molding process to duplicate the Bonito 5VBR
fiberglass hull and by knowingly selling such duplicates.
Petitioner sought damages, injunctive relief, and an award of
attorney's fees under the Florida law. The trial court granted
respondent's motion to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the
statute conflicted with federal patent law, and was therefore
invalid under the Supremacy Clause of the Federal Constitution. The
Florida Court of Appeals and the Florida Supreme Court
affirmed.
Held: The Florida statute is preempted by the Supremacy
Clause. Pp.
489 U. S.
146-168.
(a) This Court's decisions have made clear that state regulation
of intellectual property must yield to the extent that it clashes
with the federal patent statute's balance between public right and
private monopoly designed to promote certain creative activity. The
efficient operation of the federal patent system depends upon
substantially free trade in publicly known, unpatented design and
utilitarian conceptions.
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel
Co., 376 U. S. 225;
Compco Corp. v. Day-Brite Lighting, Inc., 376 U.
S. 234. A state law that interferes with the enjoyment
of such a conception contravenes the ultimate goal of public
disclosure and use that is the centerpiece of federal patent
policy. Moreover, through the creation of patent-like rights, the
States could essentially redirect inventive efforts away from the
careful criteria of patentability developed by Congress over the
last 200 years. Pp.
489 U. S.
146-157.
Page 489 U. S. 142
(b) By offering patent-like protection for ideas deemed
unprotected under the federal patent scheme, the Florida statute
conflicts with the "strong federal policy favoring free competition
in ideas which do not merit patent protection."
Lear, Inc. v.
Adkins, 395 U. S. 653,
395 U. S. 656.
The Florida statute does not prohibit "unfair competition" in the
usual sense of that term, but rather is aimed at promoting
inventive effort by preventing the efficient exploitation of the
design and utilitarian conceptions embodied in the product itself.
It endows the original boat manufacturer with rights against the
world, similar in scope and operation to the rights accorded the
federal patentee. This protection is made available for an
unlimited number of years to all boat hulls and their component
parts. Protection is available for subject matter for which patent
protection has been denied or has expired, as well as for designs
which have been freely revealed to the consuming public by their
creators. In this case, the statute operates to allow petitioner to
assert a substantial property right in a design idea which has
already been available to the public for over six years. Pp.
489 U. S.
157-160.
(c) That the Florida statute does not restrict all means of
reproduction does not eliminate the conflict with the federal
patent scheme. In essence, the statute grants the original
manufacturer the right to prohibit a form of reverse engineering of
a product in general circulation. This is one of the rights granted
to the federal patent holder, but has never been part of state
protection under the law of unfair competition or trade secrets.
The study and recomposition of unpatented articles available to the
public at large may lead to significant advances in technology and
design. Moreover, the threat of reverse engineering of unpatented
articles creates a significant spur to the achievement of the
rigorous standards of patentability established by Congress. By
substantially altering this competitive reality, the Florida
statute and similar state laws may erect themselves as substantial
competitors to the federal patent scheme. Such a result would
contravene the congressional intent to create a uniform system for
determining the boundaries of public and private right in
utilitarian and design ideas.
Kewanee Oil Co. v. Bicron
Corp., 416 U. S. 470,
distinguished. Pp.
489 U. S.
160-165.
(d) The Patent and Copyright Clauses of the Federal Constitution
do not by their own force, or by negative implication, deprive the
States of the power to adopt rules to promote intellectual creation
within their own jurisdictions where Congress has left the field
free of federal regulation.
Goldstein v. California,
412 U. S. 546.
Even as to design and utilitarian conceptions within the subject
matter of the patent laws, the States may place limited regulations
on the exploitation of unpatented ideas to prevent consumer
confusion as to source or the tortious appropriation of trade
secrets. Both the law of unfair competition and state trade secret
law have coexisted harmoniously with federal patent protection
Page 489 U. S. 143
for almost 200 years, and Congress has demonstrated its full
awareness of the operation of state law in these areas without any
indication of disapproval.
Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp.,
464 U. S. 238. The
same cannot be said of the Florida scheme at issue here, where
Congress has explicitly considered the need for additional
protections for industrial designs and declined to act. By
according patent-like protection to the otherwise unprotected
design and utilitarian aspects of products in general circulation,
the Florida statute enters a field of regulation which the patent
laws have reserved to Congress, and is therefore preempted by the
Supremacy Clause of the Federal Constitution. Pp.
489 U. S.
165-168.
515 So. 2d
220, affirmed.
O'CONNOR, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
We must decide today what limits the operation of the federal
patent system places on the States' ability to offer substantial
protection to utilitarian and design ideas which the patent laws
leave otherwise unprotected. In
Interpart
Page 489 U. S. 144
Corp. v. Italia, 777 F.2d 678 (1985), the Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit concluded that a California law
prohibiting the use of the "direct molding process" to duplicate
unpatented articles posed no threat to the policies behind the
federal patent laws. In this case, the Florida Supreme Court came
to a contrary conclusion. It struck down a Florida statute which
prohibits the use of the direct molding process to duplicate
unpatented boat hulls, finding that the protection offered by the
Florida law conflicted with the balance struck by Congress in the
federal patent statute between the encouragement of invention and
free competition in unpatented ideas.
See 515 So. 2d 220
(1987). We granted certiorari to resolve the conflict, 486 U.S.
1004 (1988), and we now affirm the judgment of the Florida Supreme
Court.
I
In September, 1976, petitioner Bonito Boats, Inc. (Bonito), a
Florida corporation, developed a hull design for a fiberglass
recreational boat which it marketed under the trade name Bonito
Boat Model 5VBR. App. 5. Designing the boat hull required
substantial effort on the part of Bonito. A set of engineering
drawings was prepared, from which a hardwood model was created. The
hardwood model was then sprayed with fiberglass to create a mold,
which then served to produce the finished fiberglass boats for
sale. The 5VBR was placed on the market sometime in September,
1976. There is no indication in the record that a patent
application was ever filed for protection of the utilitarian or
design aspects of the hull, or for the process by which the hull
was manufactured. The 5VBR was favorably received by the boating
public, and "a broad interstate market" developed for its sale.
Ibid.
In May, 1983, after the Bonito 5VBR had been available to the
public for over six years, the Florida Legislature enacted
Fla.Stat. § 559.94 (1987). The statute makes
"[i]t . . . unlawful for any person to use the direct molding
process to duplicate
Page 489 U. S. 145
for the purpose of sale any manufactured vessel hull or
component part of a vessel made by another without the written
permission of that other person."
§ 559.94(2). The statute also makes it unlawful for a
person to "knowingly sell a vessel hull or component part of a
vessel duplicated in violation of subsection (2)." §
559.94(3). Damages, injunctive relief, and attorney's fees are made
available to "[a]ny person who suffers injury or damage as the
result of a violation" of the statute. § 559.94(4). The
statute was made applicable to vessel hulls or component parts
duplicated through the use of direct molding after July 1, 1983.
§ 559.94(5).
On December 21, 1984, Bonito filed this action in the Circuit
Court of Orange County, Florida. The complaint alleged that
respondent here, Thunder Craft Boats, Inc. (Thunder Craft), a
Tennessee corporation, had violated the Florida statute by using
the direct molding process to duplicate the Bonito 5VBR fiberglass
hull, and had knowingly sold such duplicates in violation of the
Florida statute. Bonito sought "a temporary and permanent
injunction prohibiting [Thunder Craft] from continuing to
unlawfully duplicate and sell Bonito Boat hulls or components," as
well as an accounting of profits, treble damages, punitive damages,
and attorney's fees. App. 6, 7. Respondent filed a motion to
dismiss the complaint, arguing that, under this Court's decisions
in
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel Co., 376 U.
S. 225 (1964), and
Compco Corp. v. Day-Brite
Lighting, Inc., 376 U. S. 234
(1964), the Florida statute conflicted with federal patent law, and
was therefore invalid under the Supremacy Clause of the Federal
Constitution. App. 8-9. The trial court granted respondent's
motion,
id. at 10-11, and a divided Court of Appeals
affirmed the dismissal of petitioner's complaint. 487 So. 2d 395
(1986).
On appeal, a sharply divided Florida Supreme Court agreed with
the lower courts' conclusion that the Florida law impermissibly
interfered with the scheme established by the federal patent laws.
See 515 So. 2d 220
(1987). The majority
Page 489 U. S. 146
read our decisions in
Sears and
Compco for the
proposition that,
"when an article is introduced into the public domain, only a
patent can eliminate the inherent risk of competition, and then but
for a limited time."
515 So. 2d at 222. Relying on the Federal Circuit's decision in
the
Interpart case, the three dissenting judges argued
that the Florida anti-direct-molding provision "does not prohibit
the copying of an unpatented item. It prohibits one method of
copying; the item remains in the public domain." 515 So. 2d at 223
(Shaw, J., dissenting).
II
Article I, § 8, cl. 8, of the Constitution gives Congress
the power
"[t]o promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by
securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive
Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."
The Patent Clause itself reflects a balance between the need to
encourage innovation and the avoidance of monopolies which stifle
competition without any concomitant advance in the "Progress of
Science and useful Arts." As we have noted in the past, the Clause
contains both a grant of power and certain limitations upon the
exercise of that power. Congress may not create patent monopolies
of unlimited duration, nor may it
"authorize the issuance of patents whose effects are to remove
existent knowledge from the public domain, or to restrict free
access to materials already available."
Graham v. John Deere Co. of Kansas City, 383 U. S.
1,
383 U. S. 6
(1966).
From their inception, the federal patent laws have embodied a
careful balance between the need to promote innovation and the
recognition that imitation and refinement through imitation are
both necessary to invention itself, and the very lifeblood of a
competitive economy. Soon after the adoption of the Constitution,
the First Congress enacted the Patent Act of 1790, which allowed
the grant of a limited monopoly of 14 years to any applicant
that
"hath . . . invented or discovered
Page 489 U. S. 147
any useful art, manufacture, . . . or device, or any improvement
therein not before known or used."
1 Stat. 109, 110. In addition to novelty, the 1790 Act required
that the invention be "sufficiently useful and important" to merit
the 14-year right of exclusion.
Ibid. Section 2 of the Act
required that the patentee deposit with the Secretary of State a
specification and, if possible, a model of the new invention,
"which specification shall be so particular, and said models so
exact, as not only to distinguish the invention or discovery from
other things before known and used, but also to enable a workman or
other person skilled in the art or manufacture . . . to make,
construct, or use the same, to the end that the public may have the
full benefit thereof, after the expiration of the patent term."
Ibid.
The first Patent Act established an agency known by
self-designation as the "Commissioners for the promotion of Useful
Arts," composed of the Secretary of State, the Secretary of the
Department of War, and the Attorney General, any two of whom could
grant a patent. Thomas Jefferson was the first Secretary of State,
and the driving force behind early federal patent policy. For
Jefferson, a central tenet of the patent system in a free market
economy was that "a machine of which we were possessed, might be
applied by every man to any use of which it is susceptible." 13
Writings of Thomas Jefferson 335 (Memorial ed.1904). He viewed a
grant of patent rights in an idea already disclosed to the public
as akin to an
ex post facto law, "obstruct[ing] others in
the use of what they possessed before."
Id. at 326-327.
Jefferson also played a large role in the drafting of our Nation's
second Patent Act, which became law in 1793. The Patent Act of 1793
carried over the requirement that the subject of a patent
application be "not known or used before the application." Ch. 11,
1 Stat. 318, 319. A defense to an infringement action was created
where
"the thing, thus secured by patent, was not originally
discovered by the patentee, but had been in use, or had been
described in some public work
Page 489 U. S. 148
anterior to the supposed discovery of the patentee."
Id. at 322. Thus, from the outset, federal patent law
has been about the difficult business
"of drawing a line between the things which are worth to the
public the embarrassment of an exclusive patent, and those which
are not."
13 Writings of Thomas Jefferson,
supra, at 335.
Today's patent statute is remarkably similar to the law as known
to Jefferson in 1793. Protection is offered to
"[w]hoever invents or discovers any new and useful process,
machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and
useful improvement thereof."
35 U.S.C. § 101. Since 1842, Congress has also made
protection available for "any new, original and ornamental design
for an article of manufacture." 35 U.S.C. § 171. To qualify
for protection, a design must present an aesthetically pleasing
appearance that is not dictated by function alone, and must satisfy
the other criteria of patentability. The novelty requirement of
patentability is presently expressed in 35 U.S.C. §§
102(a) and (b), which provide:
"A person shall be entitled to a patent unless -- "
"(a) the invention was known or used by others in this country,
or patented or described in a printed publication in this or a
foreign country, before the invention thereof by the applicant for
patent, or"
"(b) the invention was patented or described in a printed
publication in this or a foreign country or in public use or on
sale in this country more than one year prior to the date of
application for patent in the United States. . . ."
Sections 102(a) and (b) operate in tandem to exclude from
consideration for patent protection knowledge that is already
available to the public. They express a congressional determination
that the creation of a monopoly in such information would not only
serve no socially useful purpose, but would in fact injure the
public by removing existing knowledge from public use. From the
Patent Act of 1790 to the present day,
Page 489 U. S. 149
the public sale of an unpatented article has acted as a complete
bar to federal protection of the idea embodied in the article thus
placed in public commerce.
In the case of
Pennock v.
Dialogue, 2 Pet. 1 (1829), Justice Story applied
these principles under the patent law of 1800. The patentee had
developed a new technique for the manufacture of rubber hose for
the conveyance of air and fluids. The invention was reduced to
practice in 1811, but letters patent were not sought and granted
until 1818. In the interval, the patentee had licensed a third
party to market the hose, and over 13,000 feet of the new product
had been sold in the city of Philadelphia alone. The Court
concluded that the patent was invalid due to the prior public sale,
indicating that, "if [an inventor] suffers the thing he invented to
go into public use, or to be publicly sold for use" "[h]is
voluntary act or acquiescence in the public sale and use is an
abandonment of his right."
Id. at 23-24. The Court noted
that, under the common law of England, letters patent were
unavailable for the protection of articles in public commerce at
the time of the application,
id. at 20, and that this same
doctrine was immediately embodied in the first patent laws passed
in this country.
Id. at 21-22.
As the holding of
Pennock makes clear, the federal
patent scheme creates a limited opportunity to obtain a property
right in an idea. Once an inventor has decided to lift the veil of
secrecy from his work, he must choose the protection of a federal
patent or the dedication of his idea to the public at large. As
Judge Learned Hand once put it:
"[I]t is a condition upon the inventor's right to a patent that
he shall not exploit his discovery competitively after it is ready
for patenting; he must content himself with either secrecy or legal
monopoly."
Metallizing Engineering Co. v. Kenyon Bearing & Auto
Parts Co., 153 F.2d 516, 520 (CA2),
cert. denied, 328
U.S. 840 (1946).
In addition to the requirements of novelty and utility, the
federal patent law has long required that an innovation not be
Page 489 U. S. 150
anticipated by the prior art in the field. Even if a particular
combination of elements is "novel" in the literal sense of the
term, it will not qualify for federal patent protection if its
contours are so traced by the existing technology in the field that
the "improvement is the work of the skillful mechanic, not that of
the inventor."
Hotchkiss v.
Greenwood, 11 How. 248,
52 U. S. 267
(1851). In 1952, Congress codified this judicially developed
requirement in 35 U.S.C. § 103, which refuses protection to
new developments where
"the differences between the subject matter sought to be
patented and the prior art are such that the subject matter as a
whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to
a person of ordinary skill in the art to which said subject matter
pertains."
The nonobviousness requirement extends the field of unpatentable
material beyond that which is known to the public under § 102,
to include that which could readily be deduced from publicly
available material by a person of ordinary skill in the pertinent
field of endeavor.
See Graham, 383 U.S. at
383 U. S. 15.
Taken together, the novelty and nonobviousness requirements express
a congressional determination that the purposes behind the Patent
Clause are best served by free competition and exploitation of that
which is either already available to the public, or that which may
be readily discerned from publicly available material.
See
Aronson v. Quick Point Pencil Co., 440 U.
S. 257,
440 U. S. 262
(1979) ("[T]he stringent requirements for patent protection seek to
ensure that ideas in the public domain remain there for the use of
the public").
The applicant whose invention satisfies the requirements of
novelty, nonobviousness, and utility, and who is willing to reveal
to the public the substance of his discovery and "the best mode . .
. of carrying out his invention," 35 U.S.C. § 112, is granted
"the right to exclude others from making, using, or selling the
invention throughout the United States," for a period of 17 years.
35 U.S.C. § 154. The federal patent system thus embodies a
carefully crafted bargain for encouraging
Page 489 U. S. 151
the creation and disclosure of new, useful, and nonobvious
advances in technology and design in return for the exclusive right
to practice the invention for a period of years.
"[The inventor] may keep his invention secret and reap its
fruits indefinitely. In consideration of its disclosure and the
consequent benefit to the community, the patent is granted. An
exclusive enjoyment is guaranteed him for seventeen years, but,
upon expiration of that period, the knowledge of the invention
inures to the people, who are thus enabled without restriction to
practice it and profit by its use."
United States v. Dubilier Condenser Corp., 289 U.
S. 178,
289 U. S.
186-187 (1933).
The attractiveness of such a bargain, and its effectiveness in
inducing creative effort and disclosure of the results of that
effort, depend almost entirely on a backdrop of free competition in
the exploitation of unpatented designs and innovations. The novelty
and nonobviousness requirements of patentability embody a
congressional understanding, implicit in the Patent Clause itself,
that free exploitation of ideas will be the rule, to which the
protection of a federal patent is the exception. Moreover, the
ultimate goal of the patent system is to bring new designs and
technologies into the public domain through disclosure. State law
protection for techniques and designs whose disclosure has already
been induced by market rewards may conflict with the very purpose
of the patent laws by decreasing the range of ideas available as
the building blocks of further innovation. The offer of federal
protection from competitive exploitation of intellectual property
would be rendered meaningless in a world where substantially
similar state law protections were readily available. To a limited
extent, the federal patent laws must determine not only what is
protected, but also what is free for all to use.
Cf. Arkansas
Electric Cooperative Corp. v. Arkansas Public Service Comm'n,
461 U. S. 375,
461 U. S. 384
(1983) ("[A] federal decision to forgo regulation in a given area
may imply an authoritative federal determination that the area is
best left
unregulated,
Page 489 U. S. 152
and, in that event, would have as much preemptive force as a
decision
to regulate") (emphasis in original).
Thus our past decisions have made clear that state regulation of
intellectual property must yield to the extent that it clashes with
the balance struck by Congress in our patent laws. The tension
between the desire to freely exploit the full potential of our
inventive resources and the need to create an incentive to deploy
those resources is constant. Where it is clear how the patent laws
strike that balance in a particular circumstance, that is not a
judgment the States may second-guess. We have long held that, after
the expiration of a federal patent, the subject matter of the
patent passes to the free use of the public as a matter of federal
law.
See Coats v. Merrick Thread Co., 149 U.
S. 562,
149 U. S. 572
(1893) ("[P]laintiffs' right to the use of the embossed periphery
expired with their patent, and the public had the same right to
make use of it as if it had never been patented");
Kellogg Co.
v. National Biscuit Co., 305 U. S. 111
(1938);
Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., 163 U.
S. 169 (1896). Where the public has paid the
congressionally mandated price for disclosure, the States may not
render the exchange fruitless by offering patent-like protection to
the subject matter of the expired patent.
"It is self-evident that, on the expiration of a patent, the
monopoly created by it ceases to exist, and the right to make the
thing formerly covered by the patent becomes public property."
Singer, supra, at
163 U. S.
185.
In our decisions in
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel
Co., 376 U. S. 225
(1964), and
Compco Corp. v. Day-Brite Lighting, Inc.,
376 U. S. 234
(1964), we found that publicly known design and utilitarian ideas
which were unprotected by patent occupied much the same position as
the subject matter of an expired patent. The
Sears case
involved a pole lamp originally designed by the plaintiff Stiffel,
who had secured both design and mechanical patents on the lamp.
Sears purchased unauthorized copies of the lamps, and was able to
sell them at a retail price practically equivalent to the
wholesale
Page 489 U. S. 153
price of the original manufacturer.
Sears, supra, at
376 U. S. 226.
Stiffel brought an action against Sears in Federal District Court,
alleging infringement of the two federal patents and unfair
competition under Illinois law. The District Court found that
Stiffel's patents were invalid due to anticipation in the prior
art, but nonetheless enjoined Sears from further sales of the
duplicate lamps based on a finding of consumer confusion under the
Illinois law of unfair competition. The Court of Appeals affirmed,
coming to the conclusion that the Illinois law of unfair
competition prohibited product simulation even in the absence of
evidence that the defendant took some further action to induce
confusion as to source.
This Court reversed, finding that the unlimited protection
against copying which the Illinois law accorded an unpatentable
item whose design had been fully disclosed through public sales
conflicted with the federal policy embodied in the patent laws. The
Court stated:
"In the present case the 'pole lamp' sold by Stiffel has been
held not to be entitled to the protection of either a mechanical or
a design patent. An unpatentable article, like an article on which
the patent has expired, is in the public domain and may be made and
sold by whoever chooses to do so. What Sears did was to copy
Stiffel's design and sell lamps almost identical to those sold by
Stiffel. This it had every right to do under the federal patent
laws."
376 U.S. at
376 U. S.
231.
A similar conclusion was reached in
Compco, where the
District Court had extended the protection of Illinois' unfair
competition law to the functional aspects of an unpatented
fluorescent lighting system. The injunction against copying of an
unpatented article, freely available to the public,
impermissibly
"interfere[d] with the federal policy, found in Art. I, §
8, cl. 8, of the Constitution and in the implementing federal
statutes, of allowing free access to copy whatever the federal
patent and copyright laws leave in the public domain."
Compco, supra, at
376 U. S.
237.
Page 489 U. S. 154
The preemptive sweep of our decisions in
Sears and
Compco has been the subject of heated scholarly and
judicial debate.
See, e.g., Symposium, Product Simulation:
A Right or a Wrong?, 64 Colum.L.Rev. 1178 (1964);
Lear, Inc. v.
Adkins, 395 U. S. 653,
395 U. S. 676
(1969) (Black, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Read
at their highest level of generality, the two decisions could be
taken to stand for the proposition that the States are completely
disabled from offering any form of protection to articles or
processes which fall within the broad scope of patentable subject
matter.
See id. at
395 U. S. 677.
Since the potentially patentable includes "anything under the sun
that is made by man,"
Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 447 U.
S. 303,
447 U. S. 309
(1980) (citation omitted), the broadest reading of
Sears
would prohibit the States from regulating the deceptive simulation
of trade dress or the tortious appropriation of private
information.
That the extrapolation of such a broad preemptive principle from
Sears is inappropriate is clear from the balance struck in
Sears itself. The
Sears Court made it plain that
the States
"may protect businesses in the use of their trademarks, labels,
or distinctive dress in the packaging of goods so as to prevent
others, by imitating such markings, from misleading purchasers as
to the source of the goods."
Sears, supra, at
376 U. S. 232
(footnote omitted). Trade dress is, of course, potentially the
subject matter of design patents.
See W. T. Rogers Co. v.
Keene, 778 F.2d 334, 337 (CA7 1985). Yet our decision in
Sears clearly indicates that the States may place limited
regulations on the circumstances in which such designs are used in
order to prevent consumer confusion as to source. Thus, while
Sears speaks in absolutist terms, its conclusion that the
States may place some conditions on the use of trade dress
indicates an implicit recognition that all state regulation of
potentially patentable but unpatented subject matter is not
ipso facto preempted by the federal patent laws.
Page 489 U. S. 155
What was implicit in our decision in
Sears we have made
explicit in our subsequent decisions concerning the scope of
federal preemption of state regulation of the subject matter of
patent. Thus, in
Kewanee Oil Co. v. Bicron Corp.,
416 U. S. 470
(1974), we held that state protection of trade secrets did not
operate to frustrate the achievement of the congressional
objectives served by the patent laws. Despite the fact that state
law protection was available for ideas which clearly fell within
the subject matter of patent, the Court concluded that the nature
and degree of state protection did not conflict with the federal
policies of encouragement of patentable invention and the prompt
disclosure of such innovations.
Several factors were critical to this conclusion. First, because
the public awareness of a trade secret is, by definition, limited,
the Court noted that
"the policy that matter once in the public domain must remain in
the public domain is not incompatible with the existence of trade
secret protection."
Id. at
416 U. S. 484.
Second, the
Kewanee Court emphasized that "[t]rade secret
law provides far weaker protection in many respects than the patent
law."
Id. at
416 U. S.
489-490. This point was central to the Court's
conclusion that trade secret protection did not conflict with
either the encouragement or disclosure policies of the federal
patent law. The public at large remained free to discover and
exploit the trade secret through reverse engineering of products in
the public domain or by independent creation.
Id. at
416 U. S. 490.
Thus, the possibility that trade secret protection would divert
inventors from the creative effort necessary to satisfy the
rigorous demands of patent protection was remote indeed.
Ibid. Finally, certain aspects of trade secret law
operated to protect noneconomic interests outside the sphere of
congressional concern in the patent laws. As the Court noted, "[a]
most fundamental human right, that of privacy, is threatened when
industrial espionage is condoned or is made profitable."
Id. at
416 U. S. 487
(footnote omitted). There was no indication that Congress
Page 489 U. S. 156
had considered this interest in the balance struck by the patent
laws, or that state protection for it would interfere with the
policies behind the patent system.
We have since reaffirmed the pragmatic approach which
Kewanee takes to the preemption of state laws dealing with
the protection of intellectual property.
See Aronson, 440
U.S. at
440 U. S. 262
("State law is not displaced merely because the contract relates to
intellectual property which may or may not be patentable; the
states are free to regulate the use of such intellectual property
in any manner not inconsistent with federal law"). At the same
time, we have consistently reiterated the teaching of
Sears and
Compco that ideas, once placed before
the public without the protection of a valid patent, are subject to
appropriation without significant restraint.
Aronson,
supra, at
440 U. S.
263.
At the heart of
Sears and
Compco is the
conclusion that the efficient operation of the federal patent
system depends upon substantially free trade in publicly known,
unpatented design and utilitarian conceptions. In
Sears,
the state law offered "the equivalent of a patent monopoly," 376
U.S. at
376 U. S. 233,
in the functional aspects of a product which had been placed in
public commerce absent the protection of a valid patent. While, as
noted above, our decisions since
Sears have taken a
decidedly less rigid view of the scope of federal preemption under
the patent laws,
e.g., Kewanee, supra, at
416 U. S.
479-480, we believe that the
Sears Court
correctly concluded that the States may not offer patent-like
protection to intellectual creations which would otherwise remain
unprotected as a matter of federal law. Both the novelty and the
nonobviousness requirements of federal patent law are grounded in
the notion that concepts within the public grasp, or those so
obvious that they readily could be, are the tools of creation
available to all. They provide the baseline of free competition
upon which the patent system's incentive to creative effort
depends. A state law that substantially interferes with the
enjoyment of an unpatented utilitarian or design conception
Page 489 U. S. 157
which has been freely disclosed by its author to the public at
large impermissibly contravenes the ultimate goal of public
disclosure and use which is the centerpiece of federal patent
policy. Moreover, through the creation of patent-like rights, the
States could essentially redirect inventive efforts away from the
careful criteria of patentability developed by Congress over the
last 200 years. We understand this to be the reasoning at the core
of our decisions in
Sears and
Compco, and we
reaffirm that reasoning today.
III
We believe that the Florida statute at issue in this case so
substantially impedes the public use of the otherwise unprotected
design and utilitarian ideas embodied in unpatented boat hulls as
to run afoul of the teaching of our decisions in
Sears and
Compco. It is readily apparent that the Florida statute
does not operate to prohibit "unfair competition" in the usual
sense that the term is understood. The law of unfair competition
has its roots in the common law tort of deceit: its general concern
is with protecting consumers from confusion as to source. While
that concern may result in the creation of "quasi-property rights"
in communicative symbols, the focus is on the protection of
consumers, not the protection of producers as an incentive to
product innovation. Judge Hand captured the distinction well in
Crescent Tool Co. v. Kilborn & Bishop Co., 247 F. 299,
301 (CA2 1917), where he wrote:
"[T]he plaintiff has the right not to lose his customers through
false representations that those are his wares which in fact are
not, but he may not monopolize any design or pattern, however
trifling. The defendant, on the other hand, may copy plaintiff's
goods slavishly down to the minutest detail: but he may not
represent himself as the plaintiff in their sale."
With some notable exceptions, including the interpretation of
the Illinois law of unfair competition at issue in
Sears
and
Page 489 U. S. 158
Compco, see Sears, supra, at
376 U. S.
227-228, n. 2, the common law tort of unfair competition
has been limited to protection against copying of nonfunctional
aspects of consumer products which have acquired secondary meaning
such that they operate as a designation of source.
See
generally P. Kaufmann, Passing Off and Misappropriation, in 9
International Review of Industrial Property and Copyright Law,
Studies in Industrial Property and Copyright Law 100-109 (1986).
The "protection" granted a particular design under the law of
unfair competition is thus limited to one context where consumer
confusion is likely to result; the design "idea" itself may be
freely exploited in all other contexts.
In contrast to the operation of unfair competition law, the
Florida statute is aimed directly at preventing the exploitation of
the design and utilitarian conceptions embodied in the product
itself. The sparse legislative history surrounding its enactment
indicates that it was intended to create an inducement for the
improvement of boat hull designs.
See Tr. of Meeting of
Transportation Committee, Florida House of Representatives, May 3,
1983,
reprinted at App. 22 ("[T]here is no inducement for
[a] quality boat manufacturer to improve these designs and
secondly, if he does, it is immediately copied. This would prevent
that, and allow him recourse in circuit court"). To accomplish this
goal, the Florida statute endows the original boat hull
manufacturer with rights against the world, similar in scope and
operation to the rights accorded a federal patentee. Like the
patentee, the beneficiary of the Florida statute may prevent a
competitor from "making" the product in what is evidently the most
efficient manner available and from "selling" the product when it
is produced in that fashion. Compare 35 U.S.C. § 154.
*
Page 489 U. S. 159
The Florida scheme offers this protection for an unlimited
number of years to all boat hulls and their component parts,
without regard to their ornamental or technological merit.
Protection is available for subject matter for which patent
protection has been denied or has expired, as well as for designs
which have been freely revealed to the consuming public by their
creators.
In this case, the Bonito 5VBR fiberglass hull has been freely
exposed to the public for a period in excess of six years. For
purposes of federal law, it stands in the same stead as an item for
which a patent has expired or been denied: it is unpatented and
unpatentable.
See 35 U.S.C. § 102(b). Whether because
of a determination of unpatentability or other commercial concerns,
petitioner chose to expose its hull design to the public in the
marketplace, eschewing the bargain held out by the federal patent
system of disclosure in exchange.for exclusive use. Yet, the
Florida statute allows petitioner to reassert a substantial
property right in the idea, thereby constricting the spectrum of
useful public knowledge. Moreover, it does so without the careful
protections of high standards of innovation and limited monopoly
contained in the federal scheme. We think it clear that such
protection conflicts with the federal policy "that all ideas in
general circulation be dedicated to the common good
Page 489 U. S. 160
unless they are protected by a valid patent."
Lear, Inc. v.
Adkins, 395 U.S. at
395 U. S.
668.
That the Florida statute does not remove all means of
reproduction and sale does not eliminate the conflict with the
federal scheme.
See Kellogg, 305 U.S. at
395 U. S. 122.
In essence, the Florida law prohibits the entire public from
engaging in a form of reverse engineering of a product in the
public domain. This is clearly one of the rights vested in the
federal patent holder, but has never been a part of state
protection under the law of unfair competition or trade secrets.
See Kewanee, 416 U.S. at
416 U. S. 476
("A trade secret law, however, does not offer protection against
discovery by . . . so-called reverse engineering, that is by
starting with the known product and working backward to divine the
process which aided in its development or manufacture");
see
also Chicago Lock Co. v. Fanberg, 676 F.2d 400, 405 (CA9 1982)
("A lock purchaser's own reverse-engineering of his own lock, and
subsequent publication of the serial number-key code correlation,
is an example of the independent invention and reverse engineering
expressly allowed by trade secret doctrine"). The duplication of
boat hulls and their component parts may be an essential part of
innovation in the field of hydrodynamic design. Variations as to
size and combination of various elements may lead to significant
advances in the field. Reverse engineering of chemical and
mechanical articles in the public domain often leads to significant
advances in technology. If Florida may prohibit this particular
method of study and recomposition of an unpatented article, we fail
to see the principle that would prohibit a State from banning the
use of chromatography in the reconstitution of unpatented chemical
compounds, or the use of robotics in the duplication of machinery
in the public domain.
Moreover, as we noted in
Kewanee, the competitive
reality of reverse engineering may act as a spur to the inventor,
creating an incentive to develop inventions that meet the rigorous
requirements of patentability. 416 U.S. at
416 U. S.
489-490.
Page 489 U. S. 161
The Florida statute substantially reduces this competitive
incentive, thus eroding the general rule of free competition upon
which the attractiveness of the federal patent bargain depends. The
protections of state trade secret law are most effective at the
developmental stage, before a product has been marketed and the
threat of reverse engineering becomes real. During this period,
patentability will often be an uncertain prospect, and, to a
certain extent, the protection offered by trade secret law may
"dovetail" with the incentives created by the federal patent
monopoly.
See Goldstein, Kewanee Oil Co. v. Bicron Corp.:
Notes on a Closing Circle, 1974 Sup.Ct.Rev. 81, 92. In contrast,
under the Florida scheme, the would-be inventor is aware from the
outset of his efforts that rights against the public are available
regardless of his ability to satisfy the rigorous standards of
patentability. Indeed, it appears that even the most mundane and
obvious changes in the design of a boat hull will trigger the
protections of the statute.
See Fla.Stat. § 559.94(2)
(1987) (protecting "any manufactured vessel hull or component
part"). Given the substantial protection offered by the Florida
scheme, we cannot dismiss as hypothetical the possibility that it
will become a significant competitor to the federal patent laws,
offering investors similar protection without the
quid pro
quo of substantial creative effort required by the federal
statute. The prospect of all 50 States' establishing similar
protections for preferred industries without the rigorous
requirements of patentability prescribed by Congress could pose a
substantial threat to the patent system's ability to accomplish its
mission of promoting progress in the useful arts.
Finally, allowing the States to create patent-like rights in
various products in public circulation would lead to administrative
problems of no small dimension. The federal patent scheme provides
a basis for the public to ascertain the status of the intellectual
property embodied in any article in general circulation. Through
the application process, detailed information
Page 489 U. S. 162
concerning the claims of the patent holder is compiled in a
central location.
See 35 U.S.C. §§ 111-114. The
availability of damages in an infringement action is made
contingent upon affixing a notice of patent to the protected
article. 35 U.S.C. § 287. The notice requirement is designed
"for the information of the public,"
Wine Railway Appliance Co.
v. Enterprise Railway Equipment Co., 297 U.
S. 387,
297 U. S. 397
(1936), and provides a ready means of discerning the status of the
intellectual property embodied in an article of manufacture or
design. The public may rely upon the lack of notice in exploiting
shapes and designs accessible to all.
See Devices for Medicine,
Inc. v. Boehl, 822 F.2d 1062, 1066 (CA Fed.1987) ("Having sold
the product unmarked, [the patentee] could hardly maintain
entitlement to damages for its use by a purchaser uninformed that
such use would violate [the] patent").
The Florida scheme blurs this clear federal demarcation between
public and private property. One of the fundamental purposes behind
the Patent and Copyright Clauses of the Constitution was to promote
national uniformity in the realm of intellectual property.
See The Federalist No. 43, p. 309 (B. Wright ed.1961).
Since the Patent Act of 1800, Congress has lodged exclusive
jurisdiction of actions "arising under" the patent laws in the
federal courts, thus allowing for the development of a uniform body
of law in resolving the constant tension between private right and
public access.
See 28 U.S.C. § 1338;
see
also Chisum, The Allocation of Jurisdiction Between State and
Federal Courts in Patent Litigation, 46 Wash.L.Rev. 633, 636
(1971). Recently, Congress conferred exclusive jurisdiction of all
patent appeals on the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, in
order to "provide nationwide uniformity in patent law." H.R.Rep.
No. 97-312, p. 20 (1981). This purpose is frustrated by the Florida
scheme, which renders the status of the design and utilitarian
"ideas" embodied in the boat hulls it protects uncertain. Given the
inherently ephemeral nature
Page 489 U. S. 163
of property in ideas, and the great power such property has to
cause harm to the competitive policies which underlay the federal
patent laws, the demarcation of broad zones of public and private
right is "the type of regulation that demands a uniform national
rule."
Ray v. Atlantic Richfield Co., 435 U.
S. 151,
435 U. S. 179
(1978). Absent such a federal rule, each State could afford
patent-like protection to particularly favored home industries,
effectively insulating them from competition from outside the
State.
Petitioner and its supporting
amici place great weight
on the contrary decision of the Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit in
Interpart Corp. v. Italia. In upholding the
application of the California "anti-direct-molding" statute to the
duplication of unpatented automobile mirrors, the Federal Circuit
stated:
"The statute prevents unscrupulous competitors from obtaining a
product and using it as the 'plug' for making a mold. The statute
does not prohibit copying the design of the product in any other
way; the latter if in the public domain, is free for anyone to
make, use or sell."
777 F.2d at 685. The court went on to indicate that "the patent
laws
say nothing about the right to copy or the right to use,
they speak only in terms of the right to exclude.'" Ibid.,
quoting Mine Safety Appliances Co. v. Electric Storage Battery
Co., 56 C.C.P.A. (Pat.) 863, 864, n. 2, 405 F.2d 901, 902, n.
2 (1969).
We find this reasoning defective in several respects. The
Federal Circuit apparently viewed the direct molding statute at
issue in
Interpart as a mere regulation of the use of
chattels. Yet, the very purpose of anti-direct-molding statutes is
to "reward" the "inventor" by offering substantial protection
against public exploitation of his or her idea embodied in the
product. Such statutes would be an exercise in futility if they did
not have precisely the effect of substantially limiting the ability
of the public to exploit an otherwise unprotected idea. As
amicus points out, the direct molding process itself has
been in use since the early 1950's.
See Brief for
Charles
Page 489 U. S. 164
E. Lipsey as
Amicus Curiae 3, n. 2. Indeed, U.S. Patent
No. 3,419,646, issued to Robert L. Smith in 1968, explicitly
discloses and claims a method for the direct molding of boat hulls.
The specifications of the Smith Patent indicate that
"[i]t is a major object of the present invention to provide a
method for making large molded boat hull molds at very low cost,
once a prototype hull has been provided."
App. to Brief for Charles E. Lipsey as
Amicus Curiae
15a. In fact, it appears that Bonito employed a similar process in
the creation of its own production mold.
See supra, at
489 U. S. 144.
It is difficult to conceive of a more effective method of creating
substantial property rights in an intellectual creation than to
eliminate the most efficient method for its exploitation.
Sears and
Compco protect more than the right of
the public to contemplate the abstract beauty of an otherwise
unprotected intellectual creation -- they assure its efficient
reduction to practice and sale in the marketplace.
Appending the conclusionary label "unscrupulous" to such
competitive behavior merely endorses a policy judgment which the
patent laws do not leave the States free to make. Where an item in
general circulation is unprotected by patent, "[r]eproduction of a
functional attribute is legitimate competitive activity."
Inwood Laboratories, Inc. v. Ives Laboratories, Inc.,
456 U. S. 844,
456 U. S. 863
(1982) (WHITE, J., concurring in result).
See also Bailey v.
Logan Square Typographers, Inc., 441 F.2d 47, 51 (CA7 1971)
(Stevens, J.) ("[T]hat which is published may be freely copied as a
matter of federal right").
Finally, we are somewhat troubled by the
Interpart
court's reference to the
Mine Safety case for the
proposition that the patent laws say "nothing about the right to
copy or the right to use." As noted above, the federal standards
for patentability, at a minimum, express the congressional
determination that patent-like protection is unwarranted as to
certain classes of intellectual property. The States are simply not
free in this regard to offer equivalent protections to ideas
Page 489 U. S. 165
which Congress has determined should belong to all. For almost
100 years, it has been well established that, in the case of an
expired patent, the federal patent laws
do create a
federal right to "copy and to use."
Sears and
Compco extended that rule to potentially patentable ideas
which are fully exposed to the public. The
Interpart
court's assertion to the contrary is puzzling, and flies in the
face of the same court's decisions applying the teaching of
Sears and
Compco in other contexts.
See Power
Controls Corp. v. Hybrinetics, Inc., 806 F.2d 234, 240 (CA
Fed.1986) ("It is well established . . . that an action for unfair
competition cannot be based upon a functional design");
Gemveto
Jewelry Co. v. Jeff Cooper Inc., 800 F.2d 256, 259 (CA
Fed.1986) (vacating injunction against copying of jewelry designs
issued under state law of unfair competition "in view of the
Sears and
Compco decisions, which hold that
copying of the article itself that is unprotected by the federal
patent and copyright laws cannot be protected by state law").
Our decisions since
Sears and
Compco have made
it clear that the Patent and Copyright Clauses do not, by their own
force or by negative implication, deprive the States of the power
to adopt rules for the promotion of intellectual creation within
their own jurisdictions.
See Aronson, 440 U.S. at
440 U. S. 262;
Goldstein v. California, 412 U. S. 546,
552-561 (1973);
Kewanee, 416 U.S. at
416 U. S.
478-479. Thus, where "Congress determines that neither
federal protection nor freedom from restraint is required by the
national interest,"
Goldstein, supra, at
412 U. S. 559,
the States remain free to promote originality and creativity in
their own domains.
Nor does the fact that a particular item lies within the subject
matter of the federal patent laws necessarily preclude the States
from offering limited protection which does not impermissibly
interfere with the federal patent scheme. As
Sears itself
makes clear, States may place limited regulations on the use of
unpatented designs in order to prevent consumer confusion as to
source. In
Kewanee, we found that
Page 489 U. S. 166
state protection of trade secrets, as applied to both patentable
and unpatentable subject matter, did not conflict with the federal
patent laws. In both situations, state protection was not aimed
exclusively at the promotion of invention itself, and the state
restrictions on the use of unpatented ideas were limited to those
necessary to promote goals outside the contemplation of the federal
patent scheme. Both the law of unfair competition and state trade
secret law have coexisted harmoniously with federal patent
protection for almost 200 years, and Congress has given no
indication that their operation is inconsistent with the operation
of the federal patent laws.
See Florida Lime & Avocado
Growers, Inc. v. Paul, 373 U. S. 132,
373 U.S. 144 (1963);
United States v. Bass, 404 U. S. 336,
404 U. S. 349
(1971).
Indeed, there are affirmative indications from Congress that
both the law of unfair competition and trade secret protection are
consistent with the balance struck by the patent laws. Section
43(a) of the Lanham Act, 60 Stat. 441, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a),
creates a federal remedy for making
"a false designation of origin, or any false description or
representation, including words or other symbols tending falsely to
describe or represent the same. . . ."
Congress has thus given federal recognition to many of the
concerns that underlie the state tort of unfair competition, and
the application of
Sears and
Compco to
nonfunctional aspects of a product which have been shown to
identify source must take account of competing federal policies in
this regard. Similarly, as JUSTICE MARSHALL noted in his concurring
opinion in
Kewanee:
"State trade secret laws and the federal patent laws have
coexisted for many, many, years. During this time, Congress has
repeatedly demonstrated its full awareness of the existence of the
trade secret system, without any indication of disapproval. Indeed,
Congress has in a number of instances given explicit federal
protection to trade secret information provided to federal
agencies."
Kewanee, supra, at
416 U. S. 494
(concurring in result) (citation omitted). The case for
Page 489 U. S. 167
federal preemption is particularly weak where Congress has
indicated its awareness of the operation of state law in a field of
federal interest, and has nonetheless decided to "stand by both
concepts and to tolerate whatever tension there [is] between them."
Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 464 U.
S. 238,
464 U. S. 256
(1984). The same cannot be said of the Florida statute at issue
here, which offers protection beyond that available under the law
of unfair competition or trade secret, without any showing of
consumer confusion, or breach of trust or secrecy.
The Florida statute is aimed directly at the promotion of
intellectual creation by substantially restricting the public's
ability to exploit ideas that the patent system mandates shall be
free for all to use. Like the interpretation of Illinois unfair
competition law in
Sears and
Compco, the Florida
statute represents a break with the tradition of peaceful
coexistence between state market regulation and federal patent
policy. The Florida law substantially restricts the public's
ability to exploit an unpatented design in general circulation,
raising the specter of state-created monopolies in a host of useful
shapes and processes for which patent protection has been denied or
is otherwise unobtainable. It thus enters a field of regulation
which the patent laws have reserved to Congress. The patent
statute's careful balance between public right and private monopoly
to promote certain creative activity is a
"scheme of federal regulation . . . so pervasive as to make
reasonable the inference that Congress left no room for the States
to supplement it."
Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp., 331 U.
S. 218,
331 U. S. 230
(1947).
Congress has considered extending various forms of limited
protection to industrial design either through the copyright laws
or by relaxing the restrictions on the availability of design
patents.
See generally Brown, Design Protection: An
Overview, 34 UCLA L.Rev. 1341 (1987). Congress explicitly refused
to take this step in the copyright laws,
see 17 U.S.C.
§ 101; H.R.Rep. No. 94-1476, p. 55 (1976), and,
Page 489 U. S. 168
despite sustained criticism for a number of years, it has
declined to alter the patent protections presently available for
industrial design.
See Report of the President's
Commission on the Patent System, S. Doc. No. 5, 90th Cong., 1st
Sess., 20-21 (1967); Lindgren, The Sanctity of the Design Patent:
Illusion or Reality?, 10 Okla.City L.Rev.195 (1985), It is for
Congress to determine if the present system of design and utility
patents is ineffectual in promoting the useful arts in the context
of industrial design. By offering patent-like protection for ideas
deemed unprotected under the present federal scheme, the Florida
statute conflicts with the "strong federal policy favoring free
competition in ideas which do not merit patent protection."
Lear, Inc., 395 U.S. at
395 U. S. 656.
We therefore agree with the majority of the Florida Supreme Court
that the Florida statute is preempted by the Supremacy Clause, and
the judgment of that court is hereby affirmed.
It is so ordered.
* In some respects, the protection accorded by the Florida
statute resembles that of a so-called "product-by-process" patent.
Such a claim "is one in which the product is defined at least in
part in terms of the method or process by which it is made." D.
Chisum, Patents § 8.05, p. 8-67 (1988). As long as the end
product of the process is adequately defined and novel and
nonobvious, a patent in the process may support a patent in the
resulting product.
See U.S. Patent and Trademark Office,
Manual of Patent Examining Procedure § 706.03(e) (5th rev.
ed.1986) ("An article may be claimed by a process of making it
provided it is definite"). The Florida statute at issue here grants
boat hull manufacturers substantial control over the use of a
particular process and the sale of an article created by that
process without regard to the novelty or nonobviousness of either
the end product or the process by which it was created. Under
federal law, this type of protection would be unavailable to
petitioner absent satisfaction of the requirements of
patentability.
See In re Thorpe, 777 F.2d 695, 697 (CA
Fed.1985) (product-by-process patent properly denied where end
result was indistinguishable from prior art).